Six Flags Entertainment (NYSE: SIX) just announced that Six Flags Over Texas will reopen on June 18, slightly more than two weeks after it reopened its Great Adventure Safari in New Jersey on May 30. Its Oklahoma City theme park, Frontier City, opened June 5 with limited-capacity access. Only unlimited season pass holders who are part of the company's loyalty program will be admitted into the Six Flags Over Texas park, located in Arlington, for the first four days.

What happened Six Flags (NYSE: SIX) shareholders outperformed a surging market last month. The stock rose 15% in May compared to a 4.5% increase in the S&P 500, according to data provided by S&P Global Market Intelligence.

Shares of amusement park operator Six Flags (NYSE: SIX) closed down 11.8% in Thursday trading after getting hit by an "initiation at sell" recommendation from investment heavyweight Goldman Sachs. Six Flags stock closed above $27 in Wednesday trading, but Goldman Sachs says the stock is only worth $22. After declining in price more than $3 Thursday, the stock is already more than halfway to Goldman's target.

Six Flags Entertainment Corporation, the world’s largest regional theme park company and the largest operator of waterparks in North America, today announced that Frontier City in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, will reopen with limited capacity beginning June 5, 2020. In accordance with Governor Stitt’s Open Up and Recover Safely Plan (OURS), and following Mayor Holt’s recent proclamation allowing businesses to reopen, the park will begin operating at reduced attendance levels and will operate in a preview mode June 5-7 for Members and Season Pass Holders only. After a short initial reopening phase, the park will gradually increase attendance levels throughout the month. The park is implementing extensive new safety measures and hygiene protocols, including several new advanced technology systems to protect guests and employees.

Six Flags Entertainment (NYSE: SIX) stock has been on quite a roller coaster ride since late February, falling from around $40 per share to just $10 before recovering partially to $23 as of this writing. Let's see what drove the the stock's freefall earlier this year and determine if Six Flags actually makes for a wise investment. Six Flag stakes its claim as the world's largest regional theme park operator and North America's largest water park operator based on number of parks.

Tigers, giraffes, rhinoceroses, baboons, and many other exotic beasts will soon be available for people cooped up for weeks by coronavirus to view at the Great Adventure animal park in New Jersey, Six Flags (NYSE: SIX) announced in a press release today. The amusement park company will open the gates to its 350-acre animal exhibit on Saturday, May 30, requiring visitors to book advance reservations in order to access the attraction. Six Flags and other theme park operators have sustained a heavy financial blow from the COVID-19 pandemic.

New Jersey is slowly opening back up for business -- and as it turns out, that's good news for Six Flags Entertainment Corporation (NYSE: SIX). On Wednesday, New Jersey Governor Phil Murphy announced that "drive-thru and drive-in events" can reopen for business immediately -- so long as vehicles either keep their windows closed, or maintain at least six feet of distance from one another. This is good news for Six Flags because, as luck would have it, the amusement park company happens to have just such a drive-thru experience handy in New Jersey -- its "Safari Adventure," through which customers can drive in their cars and view "more than 1,200 exotic animals" at Six Flags Great Adventure park.

Six Flags Entertainment Corporation, the world’s largest regional theme park company, and the largest operator of waterparks in North America, today announced the launch of an innovative, new guest reservation system. The user-friendly process will allow parks to manage daily attendance levels and avoid overcrowding in accordance with Centers for Disease Control recommendations on social distancing.

KlaymanToskes ("KT"), www.klaymantoskes.com, announced today that it is investigating damages sustained by current and former employees and investors of Six Flags Entertainment (NYSE:SIX) ("Six Flags") who held large, unhedged concentrated positions in Six Flags stock and/or received margin calls resulting in the forced sale of stock. The recent losses were the result of unsuitable advice during the Coronavirus ("COVID-19") pandemic. The investigation focuses on full-service brokerage firms’ negligence and failure to supervise the management of concentrated, leveraged positions in Six Flags stock.

Ever since passengers started getting stranded in quarantine situations on cruise ships back in February due to the coronavirus outbreaks, it was clear the cruise ship industry would suffer a major blow. Cruise ships -- with their crowded living spaces, constant exposure to new lands and people, and limited medical facilities and supplies -- are nearly perfect breeding grounds for the highly contagious virus. Carnival (NYSE: CCL), Royal Caribbean (NYSE: RCL), and Norwegian Cruise Line Holdings (NYSE: NCLH) have been forced to halt cruises as a result of efforts to halt the pandemic following multiple outbreaks of COVID-19 aboard their ships.

Six Flags' (NYSE: SIX) shares dramatically outperformed the market last month, soaring 60% compared to a 13% increase in the S&P 500, according to data provided by S&P Global Market Intelligence. The rally only erased a portion of shareholders' recent paper losses, though, with declines weighing in at 55% so far in 2020. Investors became intensely pessimistic about the entertainment business following COVID-19 developments that forced closures of all of Six Flags' parks through most of the spring season.

Six Flags Entertainment Corporation (NYSE: SIX), the world’s largest regional theme park company and the largest operator of waterparks in North America, today announced first quarter 2020 earnings, and updated its response to the COVID-19 pandemic.

Six Flags Entertainment Corporation (NYSE: SIX), the world’s largest regional theme park company and the largest operator of waterparks in North America, today announced that its indirect, wholly-owned subsidiary, Six Flags Theme Parks Inc. ("SFTP") has closed its private offering of $725 million aggregate principal amount of senior secured notes. The net proceeds from this offering will be used to repay indebtedness and the remaining amount for general corporate matters and working capital purposes, including expenses relating to the transaction.